* Using `IntervalSet` type data for `LeafRange`
* Updated log ticker
* Update to `eth67`
details:
Disabled by default, use `ENABLE_LEGACY_ETH66=0` to enable
No support for `Get/NodeData` dialogue via eth, anymore
* Dissolved fetch/common.nim
details;
the log/ticker part becomes ticker.nim
the interval range management is merged into fetch.nim
* Updated account scheduler
why:
The previous scheduler fetched each account once (for different state
roots.) The updated scheduler re-calibrates after a change of the state
root and potentially (until told otherwise) fetches all possible
accounts.
* Fix `high(P)` fringe cases in `IntervalSet` handling
why:
The `high(P)` value for a point type `P` cannot be represented with
half open intervals `[a,b)` for a,b points of `P`. So this single value
needs extra treatment which was slightly wrong.
* Updated docu/comments
also:
rebased
* Update scheduler
details:
Change the `pivot` management when creating new accounts lists. It is
strictly increasing (and wrapping around) depending on last updated
accounts list.
* Enable optional chunked RLPx messages
why:
Legacy feature used by Nethermind
details:
Disable with make flag: ENABLE_CHUNKED_RLPX=0
* Rebase & bump nim-eth
* Fix default behaviour
why:
Got lost somehow. Comments do not match GNU make code directives.
* dist: precompiled binaries and Docker images
The builds are reproducible, the binaries are portable and statically link librocksdb.
This took some patching. Upstream PR: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9752
32-bit ARM is missing as a target because two different GCC versions
fail with an ICE when trying to cross-compile RocksDB. Using Clang
instead is too much trouble for a platform that nobody should be using
anyway.
(Clang doesn't come with its own target headers and libraries, can't be
easily convinced to use the ones from GCC, so it needs an fs image from
a 32-bit ARM distro - at which point I stopped caring).
* CI: disable reproducibility test
Remove the C and Go example wrappers that call Nimbus as a library, by removing
the entire `wrappers/` directory. They are removed because they only wrap
Whisper protocol support, which has been removed as it is obsolete.
The only thing wrapped were Whisper functions, even though there were separate
`go_wrapper_example` and `go_wrapper_whisper_example` programs. The wrappers
don't build without Whisper in Nimbus, and without it, there isn't enough left
for them to be useful examples.
Also remove support for building the whole of Nimbus as a library, because
there is nothing left using it. These targets are gone from the Makefile:
- `wrappers`
- `wrappers-static`
- `libnimbus.so`
- `libnimbus.a`
The code isn't really gone, because it remains available in Git history. It
may be useful someday, so a comment has been left in the Makefile for future
generations:
> This note is kept so that anyone wanting to build Nimbus as a library or call
> from C or Go will know it has been done before. The previous working version
> can be found in Git history. Look for the `nimbus-eth1` commit that adds
> this comment and removes `wrappers/*`.
Also worth a note, the library support was not tested on Windows, and the
shared library support was only tested on Linux.
Signed-off-by: Jamie Lokier <jamie@shareable.org>
why:
on 32bit windows 7, there seems to be a 64k memory ceiling for the gcc
compiler which was exceeded on some test platform.
details:
compiling VM2 for low memory C compiler can be triggered with
"make ENABLE_VM2LOWMEM". this comes with a ~24% longer execution time
of the test suite against old VM and optimised VM2.
why:
vm2 enabled by ENABLE_VM2=1 behaves as vm without ENABLE_EVMC=1 until
it doesn't in some future fatch set. this leaves some wiggle room
to work on a vm copy without degrading the original implementation.
details:
+ additional make flag ENABLE_VM2=1 (or ENABLE_VM2=0 to explicitely disable)
+ when both flags ENABLE_EVMC=1 and ENABLE_VM2=1 are present, the former
flag ENABLE_EVMC=1 takes precedence, this is implemented at the NIM
compiler level for -d:evmc_enabled and -d:vm2_enabled
* switch to chronos metrics, remove insecure
See https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth2/pull/2468
also fixes pcre linking for real, and adds some random build flags that
help nimbus-eth2 stay afloat
* fix help
* don't omit frame pointers on windows
* bump vendor/nimbus-build-system
- add the Nim compiler header to the Nimbus header
- also support the USE_LIBBACKTRACE env var
* "go-checks" target no longer available
- Travis: switch language
- AppVeyor: disable `mingw32-make go-checks` for now
- `make update`: export GIT_LFS_SKIP_SMUDGE=1
- CI: disable the LFS script inside Makefile,
since we run it separately (and git-lfs is not installed in the Travis
macOS image if we found a valid cache).
- re-enable Nim's cache globally
- add a new "nimcache" subdir for the libraries
- make sure Go doesn't try to link libnimbus.a in the dynamically linked
wrapper example
- always delete the static archive before recreating it
- rename wrapper.nim/.h to libnimbus.nim/.h
- better hygiene in libnimbus.h (include guards and C++ support)
- remove MainnetBootnodes copy, since we do include "config.nim" after all
- moved "nimbus/api" to "wrappers"
- renamed files
- replaced the build scripts with Makefile targets
- set the rpath relative to the test binary's location so it can look
for libnimbus.so there at runtime
- libnimbus.so.0 required on Linux, apparently
- compiled all the Nimbus code with `--app:lib`, not just one file (this
required skipping a proc in "nimbus/config.nim" because it uses an API
that's unavailable in libraries)
- removed static linking from the Go wrapper. It doesn't make sense at a
global level, when using a shared Nimbus library. To selectively link
static libraries, we should probably be specifying them as *.a. I did
build a static libnimbus.a, as a test, but it insisted on dlopen-ing a
shared version of itself which looked too ugly to continue.